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Technology in Action

Technology in Action. Chapter 3 Using the Internet: Making the Most of the Web’s Resources. Chapter Topics. Forms of Internet communication Internet multimedia E-commerce Managing online annoyances Web browsers URLs Hyperlinks. Chapter Topics (cont.). Search engines

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Technology in Action

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  1. Technology in Action Chapter 3 Using the Internet: Making the Most of the Web’s Resources

  2. Chapter Topics • Forms of Internet communication • Internet multimedia • E-commerce • Managing online annoyances • Web browsers • URLs • Hyperlinks

  3. Chapter Topics (cont.) • Search engines • Boolean operators • Evaluating Web sites • How data travels on the Internet • Internet service providers • Origin of the Internet • Future of the Internet

  4. Internet Communications • Instant Messaging • Podcasts • Blogs and Vlogs • Webcasts • Wikis • Voice over Internet (VoIP) • E-mail

  5. Internet Communications • Group communication • Internet social network • Multiplayer online game services • Chat rooms • Newsgroups • Listservs

  6. Instant Messaging • Real-time text-based conversations • List of contacts: buddy list • Contacts must be online • IM software detects presence • Example: AOL Instant Messenger

  7. Podcasts • Podcasts: Compressed audio/video files distributed on the Internet • RSS (Really Simple Syndication) technology allows constant updates for subscribers • Podcasts are all over the Web • Need “aggregator” software to gather podcasts • Need media player software to play them • Simple to create

  8. Blogs and Vlogs • Weblogs: blogs • Available to the public • Simple to create, read, and manage • Entries listed on a single page with most recent entry at the top • Searchable • Video blog: vlog • Digital video clips playable on media player software

  9. Webcasts and Wikis • Webcast: Broadcast of audio/visual content over the Internet • Not updated automatically • Use streaming media • Wiki: Web site that allows anyone to change its content • provide source for collaborative writing

  10. Voice over Internet Protocol • VoIP: Using the Internet to place phone calls • Uses technology similar to e-mail to send voice data digitally • Requires a microphone, an Internet connection, and a VoIP provider • Services differ: • Free services require an account on both ends • Paid services connect phone to computer • Cable/DSL providers offer phone through broadband • WiFi IP phones call through Internet hotspots and wireless networks

  11. E-mail • Electronic mail • E-mail accounts • Client-based • Web-based

  12. Social Networks • Social networks: online personal networks • MySpace.com and Facebook.com • Members share common interests • Members communicate by voice, chat, IM, video, and blogs • Members create personalized profiles • Growth has been explosive • Risks must be recognized and reduced

  13. Multiplayer Online Game Services • Multiplayer Online Games: play occurs over the Internet among many other players • Persistent or ever-on game environment • Some games let you interact with other players

  14. Chat Rooms • Real-time text-based conversations • Rooms focus on specific topics or interests • Identity protection • Username • Netiquette: Rules of polite interaction

  15. Newsgroups and Listservs • Newsgroups • Online discussion forums • Members post and reply to messages • Create or respond to “threads” • Listservs • Electronic mailing lists of e-mail addresses of people interested in a topic • Threads are sent as e-mails • Less public than newsgroups

  16. Web Entertainment • Multimedia: • Involves forms of media and text • Graphics • Audio • Video • Streaming audio and video • Some files require plug-in

  17. E-Commerce • E-Commerce: Conducting business online • Business-to-consumer (B2C) • Business-to-business (B2B) • Consumer-to-consumer (C2C)

  18. E-Commerce Safeguards • Online transactions can be safer than traditional retail shopping • VeriSign is a company that certifies that online transactions are secure • Closed padlock icon indicates a secure web site • URL changes from http:// to https://

  19. Online Annoyances • Spam • Cookies • Adware/Pop-ups • Spyware • Malware • Phishing and Hoaxes

  20. Spam • Junk e-mail • Avoid spam: • Separate e-mail account • Spam filters • Antispam practices

  21. Cookies • Text files stored on client computers when visiting Web sites • Used on return visits to Web sites • Unique ID number • Personal information remembered • Privacy risk

  22. Adware and Pop-Ups • Adware • Programs that download on your PC when you install/use other software • Enable sponsored ads to appear in your browser window or as pop-up • Pop-ups can be eliminated • Pop-up blockers • Anti-pop-up software

  23. Spyware • Added as a program piggybacked with a requested program • Gathers information, usually about surfing habits • Antivirus software doesn’t detect it • Spyware removal programs are required

  24. Malware • Software that has a malicious intent • Spyware is a form of malware • Other forms are viruses, worms, and Trojan horses • Designed to render a computer useless or penetrate it completely

  25. Phishing and Hoaxes • Phishing • Phony communication that attempts to scam someone into revealing personal information • Often looks very official • Hoaxes • Contain information that is untrue • May request that people send money

  26. Navigating the Web: Web Browsers • Computer software • Graphical • Enables Web navigation • Popular browsers: • Internet Explorer • Mozilla’s Firefox • Camino (Mac OS X)

  27. Browser Features • Quick tabs: Shows thumbnail images of all open Web pages in open tabs • Tabbed browsing: Multiple pages available in same browser window

  28. Getting Around the Web • Web sites • URLs • Hyperlinks • Favorites and Bookmarks

  29. Web Sites • Web site: • Collection of related Web pages • First page known as Home or Index page • Web page: • HTML document • Text and graphics • Unique address • Hyperlinks

  30. URLs • URL: • Uniform Resource Locator • Unique Web site address URL

  31. Current Top-Level Domains .aero Members of the air transport industry .biz Businesses .com Can be used by anyone .coop Cooperative associations .edu Degree granting institutions .gov United States government .info Information service providers .jobs Posting and recruiting job opportunities .mil United States military .museum Museums .name Individuals .net Networking organizations .org Organizations (often nonprofits) .pro Credentialed professionals .travel Travel-related services

  32. Hyperlinks

  33. Favorites and Bookmarks • List of favorite Web pages • Easy method of returning to Web pages • IE and Safari = Favorites • Firefox = Bookmarks

  34. Search Engines • User keys word or phrase in search box • “Spider” or “Web crawler” program scans Web pages • Results are indexed and sent to the client

  35. Subject Directories • Web pages organized by topics and subtopics • Do not use keywords to search • Narrow search by clicking on subfolders

  36. Boolean Operators • Boolean operators: Used to refine searches

  37. Evaluating Web Sites • Who is the author of the article or Web site sponsor? • What audience is the site geared toward? • Is the site biased? • Is the information current? • Are links available?

  38. Internet Basics • Clients and servers • Connecting to the Internet • Finding an Internet Service Provider • Origin of the Internet

  39. Clients and Servers • The Internet is a client/server network • Client computer: • Users connected to the Internet • Requests data and Web pages • Server computer: • Stores Web pages and data • Returns the requested data to the client • IP addresses

  40. Connecting to the Internet • Dial-up connections • Broadband connections • Cable • Satellite • DSL

  41. Broadband Connections • Cable • Uses coaxial cable and a cable modem • Fast connection speed • Speed depends on number of users • Not available in all areas Coaxial cable

  42. Broadband Connections • Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) • Uses telephone lines • Faster than dial-up • Doesn’t tie up line • Requires special DSL modem

  43. Broadband Connections • Fiber optic Internet • Sends light through fiber optics • Fast • Expensive • Only available in certain areas

  44. Broadband Connections • Satellite • Uses a satellite dish and coaxial cable • Almost anyone in the U.S. can receive satellite service • Signal is affected by location and weather

  45. Dial-Up Connections • Uses standard telephone line • Requires a modem to convert analog and digital signals • Slowest connection speed (56K)

  46. Comparing Internet Connection Options

  47. Provides user access to the Internet National, regional, or local companies Broadband connection: broadband provider is your ISP Dial-up connection: need to determine ISPs available in your area Internet Service Providers

  48. The Origin of the Internet • ARPANET • Advanced Research Projects Agency Network • Funded by the U.S. government in the 1960s • Allowed computers at leading universities and research organizations to communicate with each other over great distances

  49. The Web vs. the Internet • The Web is part of the Internet distinguished by: • Communication protocols (TCP/IP) and languages (HTML) • Special links (hyperlinks) • 1989: Web invented by Tim Berners-Lee • 1993: Mosaic browser • 1994: Netscape: beginning of Web’s major growth

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